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2014-15 President鈥檚 Medalists contribute to a world of good, as undergraduates

Each year, undergraduate students of the highest caliber are selected for the prestigious President鈥檚 medal. For 2014-15, the President’s Medalists are active within and beyond the four walls of a classroom. Whether it’s through research, teaching dance or volunteering in hospitals, these students aren’t waiting until they graduate to contribute to a world of good. They’re busy making the world a better place right now.

Goalkeeper, photographer and skateboarder awarded president’s medals

乱伦社区 president’s medalists were recently selected for their high scholastic standing and difficulty of coursework. They represent undergraduate scholarship of the highest caliber. The students’ academic pursuits show interdisciplinary interests and their co-curricular and extracurricular activities demonstrate their classroom energy and commitment to a host of other interests. They are truly interesting individuals.

UW football team has 2nd highest graduation rate in Pac-12: article

On October 10, 2013, the Seattle Times reported that the UW football team has the 2nd highest graduation rate in the PAC-12.

Citing UW athletic officials, the Times reported that the “football team has a combined grade-point average of 2.78 and 74 percent of Husky football players graduate from college within six years.” Stanford has the highest graduation rate in the PAC-12.

provides academic support and teaches life skills to the UW’s 650 student athletes.

Honors student Genevieve Gebhart selected for Luce Scholarship

Genevieve (Gennie) Gebhart is the UW’s most recent Luce Scholar.

Genevieve (Gennie) Gebhart, a senior Honors student majoring in international studies and economics, was recently selected as a 2013-14 Luce Scholar. A graduate of Mercer Island High School, Gebhart is one of 18 students nationwide to receive this scholarship this year.

The 乱伦社区 is one of two Pac-12 institutions with a Luce Scholar this year.

The is a major national scholarship awarded to fewer than 20 students each year. More than 160 candidates were nominated by 75 colleges and universities this year. The program is designed to raise awareness of Asia among young American leaders and funds a stipend, language training, and places scholars in professional worksites in Asia. A unique element of the Luce Scholars Program is that the foundation seeks students with little to no experience in and of Asia. Students who have had broad experience in Asia or who are majoring in Asian studies, for example, are ineligible for the scholarship.

Though she isn鈥檛 new to international travel (and was in Rome when she learned about her selection), Gebhart wrote by email that 鈥淎sia is the area of the world about which I know the least. I hope to gain some insight into Asia in general and my country of placement in particular, and [I] feel lucky to be able to do it with the support of the Luce Foundation’s experience, expertise, and infrastructure.鈥

As an undergraduate, Gebhart鈥檚 accomplishments extend well beyond the classroom and include research projects and leadership accomplishments. She has been on the Dean鈥檚 list every quarter since entering the UW in 2009; earned a Mary Gates Research Scholarship to research eating disorders, family dynamics and film in southern Italy; received Mary Gates Leadership Scholarships for her work developing the women鈥檚 program of the Husky Cycling Club and then serving as the club鈥檚 president; was the youngest-ever recipient of the UW Libraries Research Award for Undergraduates; and was selected for several additional scholarships. As if that weren鈥檛 enough, Gebhart is also a vocalist on the Grammy-nominated recording of 鈥淭he Shoe Bird鈥 with the Seattle Symphony.

Gebhart鈥檚 interests have led her on a multidisciplinary path culminating in a plan to pursue international librarianship and address issues of information access. She wrote, 鈥淢y multidisciplinary education has been one big string of surprises. I never could have predicted that I would be involved in economics, or film studies, or library sciences鈥攁nd, I never could have predicted that I would be doing those things all at once! My education at UW has made me more open to different fields and ways of doing things, and it’s made me more perceptive of unexpected connections among all those fields. For something like information sciences, this is invaluable鈥攚hat librarians do is so multidisciplinary and requires so much intellectual flexibility.

鈥淚nformation access takes a different shape in every nation and every community,鈥 writes Gebhart, 鈥渂ut in the end it comes down to a balance between literacy, distribution, and policy. I see my role as figuring out how to optimize these three elements, something that I think is impossible without public engagement and advocacy at every level. So,聽I think I can make the greatest contribution in clarifying and communicating the urgency of information issues to non-academic and non-professional audiences. We’ve got these buzz words like 鈥榦pen access,鈥 鈥榠nformation justice,鈥 and 鈥榠nformation commons鈥 floating around, but the connections between them are new, counterintuitive, and not yet well understood.鈥

Gebhart鈥檚 interest in libraries was inspired in part and wholly supported by her work in UW鈥檚 library system. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the people I get to work with that have really role-modeled for me the many ways in which a librarian can be a force for the greater good,鈥 she notes.

After her term as a Luce Scholar, Gebhart is considering graduate school but also wants to be open to opportunities that may present themselves while in Asia. Ultimately, though, 鈥淚 see myself following a path that sticks to what I think is at the heart of librarianship, regardless of how technology and resources change. It’s about how about how people express, record, and narrate their experiences, and how available information can shape communities and the people in them. I hope to look back one day and be able to say that everything I’ve done has been in service to those greater ideas, to using information for public good.鈥

In addition to her academic pursuits, Gebhart enjoys creative writing, swimming, hiking, and is studying Italian, French, and Latin.

Read a Q & A with Gebhart here.

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Q & A with Luce Scholar Genevieve Gebhart

Learn more about Gennie Gebhart’s experiences at the UW and what her future plans are in this Q&A, conducted over email while Gennie was on a study abroad experience in Rome.

Why did you apply for the Luce Scholarship?

I knew that I wanted to take time to travel after graduation, and I knew that I wanted to do something with libraries outside the US. I was especially drawn to the聽Luce聽because of the incredible amount of personal attention and support the program offers鈥攖he聽Luce聽Scholars Program works to find individual job placements for every scholar, and continues to support scholars with language training and periodic group meetings throughout the year.

What do you hope to learn through the Luce program?聽

I’ve been fortunate to do a lot of international travel, and Asia is the area of the world about which I know the least. I hope to gain some insight into Asia in general and my country of placement in particular, and feel lucky to be able to do it with the support of the Luce Foundation’s experience, expertise, and infrastructure.

Do you know where you鈥檒l be going? Where do you hope to go and why?

I’m still in the middle of the placement process, so I can’t say for sure yet. This is a great chance, however, to give the Luce Scholars Program huge thanks and praise for their placement process鈥攖heir support has been remarkable.

Your bio for the Luce scholarship says, 鈥淕ennie hopes to enter the global open access debate armed with international experience, a multidisciplinary education, and constant mindfulness of the vital human side of digital information technology.鈥 What do you imagine you鈥檒l do in the 鈥済lobal access debate鈥?

Information access takes a different shape in every nation and every community, but in the end it comes down to a balance between literacy, distribution, and policy. I see my role as figuring out how to optimize these three elements, something that I think is impossible without public engagement and advocacy at every level. So,聽I think I can make the greatest contribution in clarifying and communicating the urgency of information issues to non-academic and non-professional audiences. We’ve got these buzz words like “open access,” “information justice,” and “information commons” floating around, but the connections between them are new, counterintuitive, and not yet well understood.

What is it about a multidisciplinary education that you’ve found valuable? How have your academic experiences shaped who you are as a thinker and doer?

My multidisciplinary education has been one big string of surprises. I never could have predicted that I would be involved in economics, or film studies, or library sciences – and, I never could have predicted that I would be doing those things all at once! My education at UW has made me more open to different fields and ways of doing things, and it’s made me more perceptive of unexpected connections among all those fields. For something like information sciences, this is invaluable – what librarians do is so multidisciplinary and requires so much intellectual flexibility.

You have a long and varied list of accomplishments and interests. How do you see them relating to one another, and what are you most proud of and why?

Looking back, I can see that the each of the things I have been drawn to do has held the seeds of this interest in information sciences. For example, in journalism and publishing, I got to explore free speech and a professional’s ethical responsibility to making information available to the public; in environmental economics, I have discovered models for the management and distribution of public resources, whether they be tangible ecological resources or digital information resources; and in international studies, I have been pushed to pursue lines of cross-cultural inquiry to surprising conclusions. Somehow, they have all connected to and informed the work I want to do in international librarianship.

How have you grown as a leader in your time at the UW?

I have been a member of the Husky Cycling Club since my first day at UW, and the club has defined my undergraduate experience.聽After having the opportunity to lead the club as president, I have learned that you don’t need to be the most skilled member of the group to be a leader. I am definitely not the fastest bike rider in the bunch, but Husky Cycling has been so special because you don’t need to be a fast or talented or exceptional cyclist in any way to be a valuable part of the group. Instead it is all about initiative and community and creative opportunities for one another. Elite athletes and curious beginners come together on Husky Cycling because we just like riding bikes, and the profound results of that simple feeling–from group cohesion to competitive success to community service–continue to amaze me.

What kind of leadership do you think the world needs and how of you hope to develop as a leader as a result of this scholarship?

We can never have enough of the kind of leaders who thrive in helping others discover and understand what they’re capable of. This scholarship is giving me a chance to get involved in projects that come down to that same leadership principle: using information, and access to information, to enhance people’s and communities’ capacity for self-realization and self-determination.

What was it about your work in聽Odegaard that led to these interests? Was there a particular experience whereby that experienced transformed from work to passion?

I can’t say enough about how my mentors at Odegaard – as well as in other parts of the UW Libraries like the Media Center, Suzzallo, and administration – have inspired and supported me. Work and projects in different parts of the UW Libraries have stimulated me and allowed me to learn more about day-to-day operations in such a massive library system, but it’s the people I get to work with that have really role-modeled for me the many ways in which a librarian can be a force for the greater good.

What do you see yourself doing after graduation and after your Luce experience?

Different travel/research fellowships are on my mind, as is grad school – but anything could happen during this next year, so I want to stay open to that, too. Right now, though, all my efforts right now are on selecting where I’m going to go as a Luce Scholar and preparing for that experience.

Project ahead鈥攚ay ahead鈥攁nd imagine you鈥檙e at your retirement party. From what are you retiring and what do you hope people will say about your life鈥檚 work? Is there anything else you’d like to add?

The technology and methods and goals are all changing so fast that it’s hard to predict what my job description will be in 40, 20, or even 5 years. That’s one of the things I like most about this field – how dynamic it is. I see myself following a path, though, that sticks to what I think is at the heart of librarianship, regardless of how technology and resources change. It’s about how people express, record, and narrate their experiences, and how available information can shape communities and the people in them. I hope to look back one day and be able to say that everything I’ve done has been in service to those greater ideas, to using information for public good

From Sputnik to the 21st century: A brief history of the UW Honors Program

Being a student of the popular TV show 鈥淢ad Men鈥 isn鈥檛 necessary to recognize the significant shifts in American society in the 1960s. The UW Honors Program was created in the midst of these changes. In this brief history, learn how and why the Honors Program came about and how it鈥檚 different today.

Honors Colloquium showcases student experiential learning experiences

At this year’s Honors Colloquium, presentations included students鈥 research, leadership, travel and service learning experiences. This new premise was designed to align with the alterations to the Honors curriculum, which incorporates each of these four elements (research, service, leadership and travel) into the new set of Honors requirements.